Women are reaching a breaking point at work
Briefly

Women are reaching a breaking point at work
"This year, the number of mothers with young children exiting the U.S. labor market saw the sharpest January-to-June decline in more than four decades. That isn't a coincidence-and it isn't a lack of ambition. Across industries, women are reassessing how-and whether-work fits into their lives. Not because they want to step back, but because too many workplaces are still designed around outdated assumptions about who provides care and how work gets done. As leaders debate return-to-office mandates, women are quietly doing the math-and deciding whether staying is worth the cost."
"The pandemic exposed and intensified a long-standing dilemma: how working women can balance their careers with family demands. Even years later, in dual-income households, women continue to shoulder the majority of caregiving responsibilities, often juggling work, childcare, elder care, and the invisible but relentless mental load that comes with it. Even now, many women are still working two full-time jobs: one at work and another at home."
"In a recent workplace study conducted by my company, 65% of working mothers reported carrying more household and childcare responsibilities than their partners, and nearly half said they shoulder most of the mental and emotional burden at home. When workplaces remain rigid and unsupportive, that strain compounds, pushing women toward burnout or out of the workforce entirely. Now, rigid return-to-office (RTO) mandates threaten to add more fuel to the fire."
This year mothers with young children experienced the sharpest January-to-June decline in exits from the U.S. labor market in more than four decades. Women across industries are reassessing how and whether work fits into their lives as too many workplaces remain designed around outdated assumptions about who provides care and how work gets done. Working women continue to shoulder the majority of caregiving, childcare, elder care, and the invisible mental load, effectively performing two full-time jobs. A workplace study found 65% of working mothers carry more household and childcare responsibilities and three out of four women said return-to-office mandates make long-term workforce participation harder.
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